Fool-for-Christ 13th century

Eulogius the Prophet

Also known as Eulogius Salosi · Eulogius the Fool-for-Christ

A Georgian fool-for-Christ and seer associated with Saint John Shavteli, honored for the gift of prophecy.

Feast Day
April 1
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Commemorated as

Saint Eulogius, Prophet and Fool-for-Christ of Salosi

Life

Eulogius the Prophet was a Georgian fool-for-Christ who lived during the reign of Queen Tamar (1184-1213). According to the Georgian tradition, he concealed a God-given gift of prophecy behind the guise of foolishness for Christ, and is honored chiefly for a single prophecy of victory delivered during one of the defining battles of the Georgian Golden Age. He is closely associated with Saint John Shavteli, the hymnographer and philosopher of the same era, and is commemorated on April 1.

The tradition relates that God blessed Eulogius's ascetic struggle and his foolishness and graced him with the gift of foreknowledge, which he kept hidden so as not to draw attention to himself. His prophetic gift became known publicly only at the Battle of Basiani (circa 1203), after which he withdrew from sight to preserve his anonymity. The sources record little of his birth, upbringing, or death beyond the report that he reposed in peace.

Contributions & Legacy

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The Prophecy at the Battle of Basiani

By tradition, when the Georgian army under Queen Tamar's husband Davit Soslan went out to meet the sultan Rukn al-Din at the Battle of Basiani (circa 1203), Queen Tamar journeyed to Odzrkhe Monastery to pray. During the Divine Liturgy there, Eulogius fell to his knees, lifted his hands to the heavens, and cried out a proclamation of victory, declaring that the mercy of God had descended upon the house of Tamar and that the army should depart in peace without fear.

Saint John Shavteli recognized the divine nature of the cry, telling Queen Tamar that the Almighty had made the coming victory known through the lips of a fool-for-Christ. Eulogius afterward confided to John that he had concealed his prophetic gift beneath his feigned foolishness. Aware that his gift had now become known, he quickly disappeared from sight to escape the people's attention.

Notes

Venerated in the Georgian tradition. OCA titles him 'Prophet'; closely linked to St John Shavteli.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints